Tiny houses offer big solutions to homelessness

In the now infamous words of Zoolander’s raging fashion icon Mugatu, tiny houses are “so hot right now.” Tiny houses are gaining popularity for many reasons including affordability, their lower carbon footprint, and the efficient compact design. But what if this popular movement could be used to solve one of urban living’s biggest crises –…

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Beyond Belief Network Guides: Fight Homelessness with The Night Minist

The Night Ministry is Foundation Beyond Belief’s 2014 Q3 Challenge the Gap beneficiary for the Humanist Giving program.  As with all FBB beneficiaries, Challenge the Gap candidates are chosen based on compatibility with the FBB mission, program effectiveness, financial responsibility, and an innovative approach to solving a problem. The Night Ministry is a Chicago-based organization…

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The Night Ministry tackles poverty and homelessness in Chicago

The Night Ministry, our third-quarter Challenge the Gap beneficiary, provides housing, health care and support to Chicago community members struggling with poverty and homelessness. The Night Ministry was founded in 1976 by a diverse group of congregations and synagogues. Thirty-eight years later, it has grown into a large, secular organization with multiple programs designed to…

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BBN teams take on hunger, homelessness, domestic violence, and more

Foundation Beyond Belief’s Beyond Belief Network is a network of secular humanist groups interested in volunteering (Volunteers Beyond Belief) and raising money for FBB and our beneficiaries (Foundation Partners Program).

October is here, and that means it’s time for hayrides, pumpkin spice lattes, and the September Beyond Belief Network Event Roundup!

The Humanist Community of Ventura County (HCVC) helped the Ventura Hillside Conservancy with one of their bimonthly park clean-ups. HCVC volunteered at the Conejo Valley Days Poker Tournament Fundraiser. The tournament is a private fundraiser for local charity Many Mansions, which provides housing with on-site, life-enriching services for low-income residents of Conejo Valley and Ventura County. Humanist Community members assisted with set-up and manager check-in. HCVC also volunteered at a Habitat for Humanity build site in Oxnard, California. The house was occupied by an elderly woman who could no longer afford to finance renovations or external maintenance. Volunteers spent more than four hours painting, laying lawn carpeting, mulching, and removing trash.

HCVC is also our very first Beyond Belief Network Team of the Month for September, primarily because of the breadth and depth of their volunteering activities recently.

Humanist Community of Ventura County

The Flagstaff Freethinkers also had a busy September. They volunteered at the Flagstaff Family Food Center, a secular food pantry. They helped with food preparation, serving, and clean-up. Julian Wallace, daughter of a Flagstaff Freethinkers member, recently devoted her birthday to fighting homelessness and hunger in her hometown. Julian loves to knit and crochet and invited the entire Flagstaff community to knit or crochet with her on her birthday. For each hour spent knitting or crocheting, money was donated to the Flagstaff Family Food Center. The Flagstaff Freethinkers collected more than $800 as well as three bags of food for the Flagstaff Family Food Center. Flagstaff Freethinkers also collected about 85 pounds of hygiene/toiletry products, as well as 30 winter coats and sweaters, 12 hats (four of which were made that day), and eight scarves (of which five were made that day). These items were collected for Flagstaff Shelter Services.

Flagstaff Freethinkers

The Humanist Community at Harvard collaborated with the Cambridge Department of Public Works to clean up the Cambridge City Park. Volunteers picked up trash, pulled weeds, and cleaned tree wells. This event kicked off HCH’s 2013 Values in Action (VIA) programming. The VIA program is HCH’s community service and interfaith initiative with a three-fold goal: to better the conditions of life for others through service to humanity, to build alliances between religious and nonreligious individuals and communities, and to combat the misconception that the nonreligious do not contribute to society. Values in Action is being sponsored in part by Foundation Beyond Belief as a pilot program. We’ll be covering VIA in more detail in the coming months.

Humanist Community at Harvard

Montgomery Area Freethought Association (MAFA) held a food drive to benefit the Montgomery Area Food Bank. They didn’t do a small drive at a meeting; they set up at a local supermarket and were able to collect donations and interact with their community. In addition to showing their community that Freethinkers are compassionate and charitable, MAFA collected nearly 3,000 pounds of food for the poor and homeless.

Montgomery Area Freethought Association

Ethics in Action recently volunteered for Lydia’s House. Lydia’s House provides transitional housing for women who need a place to stay after leaving an abuse shelter, and it also helps them gain the skills and confidence they need to get back on their feet. Volunteers washed dishes, mopped floors, scrubbed child seats, and even dusted cobwebs off the ceiling!

Ethics in Action

Humanists of Houston packed food at the Houston Food Bank. They packed a total of 469 boxes with a balanced selection of food for CFSP. CFSP provides income-eligible seniors with a 25 lb. box of food every month. That’s an estimated 11,725 meals!

Humanists of Houston

The University of North Georgia Humanist Student Union collected trash along the shores of their local lake as part of the annual shore sweep.

University of North Georgia Humanist Student Union

In October, Beyond Belief Network is observing Domestic Violence Awareness Month by encouraging BBN teams to help local shelters. If you are a member of a secular humanist or atheist group and would like to participate, join Beyond Belief Network. We welcome all atheist groups interested in service, from groups with extensive volunteer experience to newly formed groups with no experience.

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Phoenix atheist lives without shelter to raise awareness about homelessness

By Elizabeth Dorssom

Seráh Blain, member of the Secular Coalition for Arizona and Flagstaff Freethinkers, has taken drastic measures to bring awareness to the problem of chronic homelessness. In a project undertaken in collaboration with Beyond Belief Network team Flagstaff Freethinkers, Blain will live on the streets of Phoenix until she raises $56,310—just $2 for every person who was homeless last year in Phoenix. Blain plans to use the money raised to benefit the Madison Street Veteran’s Association, which is at risk of losing funding for its women’s shelter.

As of August 23, Blain has raised $1,500, and she will not return home until she has raised the full amount of her goal. For more information, or to donate money, click here. You can also follow’s Seráh’s blog about her experiences here.

We will be following Seráh’s progress and sharing updates about her project. If your local humanist group has its own inspiring project, or if you’re new to volunteering and could use some advice and assistance, join FBB’s Beyond Belief Network. BBN staff is available to assist teams in finding volunteer opportunities and in committing to a regular schedule of volunteer events, making hands-on volunteering a major part of their groups’ activity and identity.

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Thank You from GO Humanity

We’re sad to say we’re closing… Dear Supporters of GO Humanity, We have very heavy news. As of October 1st, 2023, GO Humanity must dissolve as an organization and cease to operate.  In 2009, we planted a seed which became the sapling of Foundation Beyond Belief which became the tree of GO Humanity. Now our…

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July Volunteer Network Roundup!

Teams in our Food Security Project (FSP) reported 52 events in July, serving 13,579 individual beneficiaries and giving out 13,579 meals! Additional GO Humanity Service Teams held 12 service events. Year to date, that makes 106,305 individual known beneficiaries served at 481 events, and 124,711 meals/kits distributed!

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June Volunteer Network Roundup!

Teams in our Food Security Project (FSP) reported 52 events in June, serving 14,316 individual beneficiaries and giving out 23,011 meals! Additional GO Humanity Service Teams held 12 service events. Year, to date, that makes 92,486 individual known beneficiaries served at 414 events, and 79,293 meals/kits distributed!

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May Volunteer Network Roundup!

Teams in our Food Security Project (FSP) reported 54 events in May, serving 14,722 individual beneficiaries and giving out 21,224 meals! Additional GO Humanity Service Teams held 10 more service events. Year, to date, that makes: 344 total team events 78,170 individual known beneficiaries served 79,293 meals/kits distributed New Food Security Project Team GO Team…

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April Volunteer Network Roundup!

Teams in our Food Security Project (FSP) reported 48 events in April, serving 16,169 individual beneficiaries and giving out 20,263 meals! Additional GO Humanity Service Teams held 17 more service events.

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